An industrious Canadian teen has put his money where his mouth is when it comes to plastic waste. Pooling savings from three jobs, he started a company that turns post-consumer plastics destined for landfill into affordable building materials—thereby, offering a revolutionary in-house solution to the pileup of waste plastic, filling “the role of Chinese recyclers” after China banned the import three years ago. At 18, Myles Peterson of Castlegar, British Columbia, is CEO and founder of the Terracore Plastic Company. And the young innovator’s first product, a promising alternative to plywood, is already on the market. In an interview with The Epoch Times, the young entrepreneur said, “Unlike companies that purchase recycled plastic instead of waste plastic, we are able to take advantage of the ban to ensure not only a lower price for our customers but to make sure that no plastic goes to waste.” The teenage CEO, who works almost …